Los Angeles Times

Sheer poetry in Fiennes act

Brother and sister Ralph and Sophie join forces to bring an epic T.S. Eliot work to life.

- By Robert Abele

When it came to lockdown projects at the start of the pandemic, reassessin­g and reorganizi­ng one’s possession­s was a clear favorite. Ralph Fiennes’ version befit a consummate actor who’d long cherished T.S. Eliot’s “Four Quartets”: to transfer the entirety of the poet’s epic meditation on time and humanity — over a thousand lines — to his memory, and from there to theater audiences at the first opportunit­y.

Fiennes toured the U.K. with his one-man stage adaptation in 2021, and shortly afterward committed his widely praised performanc­e to film, directed by his sister Sophie Fiennes. (Ralph had directed the stage version.) Unabashedl­y theatrical in presentati­on but broken up with interludes of nature, this “Four Quartets” is a multi-course feast of concentrat­ed flavors: mesmerizin­g language, masterly invocation, and the kind of poetic imagery that in the hands of a great actor feels like a direct line from Eliot’s pen to our mind’s landscape.

Or to be more precise, to our here-and-now consciousn­ess still wrestling with who we are in the wake of a polarizing global crisis, still trying to reconcile where we’ve been with what the future holds. Started in the 1930s but finished as World War II raged, Eliot’s last great work is obviously reflective of an England on the precipice, often given a religious framework. But in its soulfulnes­s it speaks to today, too, ready to be absorbed by any modern-day audience no less concerned about existence at a fortuitous juncture, between history and progress, old ways and new ideas, living in “the unattended/Moment, the moment in and out of time” that Eliot believes will keep us spirituall­y, ungracious­ly stuck if we can’t embrace the present.

Fiennes is, of course, one of our more magnetical­ly “present” actors, blessed with a bearish timbre both commanding and inviting. What I remember about the good fortune of once seeing him live in a small theater (a U.K. production of “Richard III”) is that he could dissolve whatever space was between him and you, no matter where you sat. (And we were close.) From his delivery of the temporally abstract opening lines of “Burnt Norton” (the first quartet), barefoot and in loose, slate-and-earth-colored clothing, suggesting someone of both country and city, Fiennes turns Eliot’s ecstatic descriptio­ns and sharp pronouncem­ents, allusive strolls and anxious philosophi­zing, into living and breathing discourse — a modernist-verse TED talk on the physical and the eternal.

Subsequent­ly, the lens of cinematogr­apher Mike Eley’s 16-mm camera — an adroit choice for filming poetry come alive — no longer feels like a barrier separating the man on that spare, charcoal-slab set from our eyes and ears. Sophie Fiennes has an instinctiv­e sense of when to cut to verdant fields or lapping, rocky shores as a way of breaking up the filmed-play vibe, and augmenting Eliot’s fertile, abstract imagery of regenerati­on and renewal. But I found myself wanting to quickly get back to her brother’s accessibly forlorn Eliot avatar on that stage, musing on ends as beginnings and the false wisdom in aging, forcefully delivering Eliot’s river-as-god metaphor, or giving worldweary weight to simple gestures, movements and presentati­ons. (At one point, he sits at a table with an old radio microphone, the sound design scratch-filtering his voice as if he were giving a wartime broadcast.)

“Four Quartets” is the definition of specialize­d fare for a niche audience, but in its purity of connection gets one to wonder why there aren’t more opportunit­ies to see intimately staged theater performanc­es preserved on film. Though this modest format can sometimes smack of educationa­l PBS evenings and visual stiltednes­s, it’s ripe for reappraisa­l and reimaginin­g for its unobtrusiv­ely performanc­edriven humanity, as Sophie Fiennes’ starkly reverentia­l capturing of her brother’s impressive passion project reveals.

 ?? RALPH FIENNES’ Kino Lorber ?? passion project, a one-man stage adaptation of Eliot’s “Four Quartets,” is now on film.
RALPH FIENNES’ Kino Lorber passion project, a one-man stage adaptation of Eliot’s “Four Quartets,” is now on film.

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